A young law student was arrested on completely bogus charges when he called out two lazy cops who parked their cruiser in a bus stop so they could grab lunch from a Brooklyn food truck, he claims in a new lawsuit.

Tzvi Richt, 22, a first-year student at Cardozo School of Law, headed home after finishing up his final exams last December when he noticed two officers honking at a man to move his car from a bus zone at Kings Highway and East 16th Street, the suit states.

The driver was using a nearby Chase ATM machine and hustled back to move his car to avoid getting a ticket, according to court papers.

The aspiring lawyer was shocked to see the officers pull into the prohibited parking area that they had just cleared out.

The officers clambered out of their cruiser and headed over to a nearby food truck for some noshing, according to the suit.

Richt claims that Braithwaite repeatedly asked him “who the f–k do you think you are?” along with other curses during the ride, the suit states.

When Richt made more legal inquiries at the station, cops told him “it’s none of your f—–g business,” according to the complaint.

After placing him in a cell for an hour and a half, Braithwaite slapped Richt with a pair of disorderly conduct citations – but the raps were eventually dropped after the officer failed to show up for a hearing, the suit states.

Richt is now concerned that the arrest will wreck his legal career before it even starts.

He “has reason to fear that the arrest may interfere with his ability to secure admission to the Bar when he graduates law school and to obtain employment as an attorney,” his complaint states.

Richt and his attorney, Joel Berger, declined to comment on the case.

A city law department spokesman said they will review the case after being served.